The Holy Roman Empire: Why It Was Neither Holy Nor Roman — Fexingo History

The Imperial Post: How the Holy Roman Empire Delivered Mail

5 min · 14 de jul de 2026
Portada del episodio The Imperial Post: How the Holy Roman Empire Delivered Mail

Descripción

In this episode of Fexingo History, Lucas and Luna explore the surprisingly modern communication network of the Holy Roman Empire: the imperial postal system. Long before email or even national postal services, the Holy Roman Empire built a sophisticated relay network of horses and riders that could move a letter from Brussels to Vienna in under a week. Lucas tells the story of the Thurn und Taxis family, who ran the Imperial Post (Reichspost) for centuries, connecting the patchwork of princely states with remarkable efficiency. He explains how the postmasters used a system of distances and time (Poststunden) to calculate postage, and how the postal system even created Europe's first regular newspaper, the Ordinari Post-Zeitung. Luna asks about the economic and political impact of this system, and Lucas reveals how it helped bind the Empire together long before modern nationalism. The conversation also touches on the post riders' specialized equipment, the Posthorn signal, and how the system was so reliable that it became the model for postal systems across Europe. A fascinating look at an overlooked pillar of Holy Roman Empire governance. #ThurnUndTaxis #Reichspost #Poststunden #OrdinariPostZeitung #HolyRomanEmpire #Posthorn #History #FexingoHistory #MedievalCommunications #MaximilianI #Brussels #Vienna #PostalSystem #EarlyModernEurope #ImperialPost #Courier #TradeRoutes #CommunicationHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

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162 episodios

episode Charlemagne's Crown and the Birth of the Holy Roman Empire artwork

Charlemagne's Crown and the Birth of the Holy Roman Empire

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the coronation of Charlemagne on Christmas Day in the year 800, an event that laid the groundwork for the Holy Roman Empire. They discuss how Pope Leo III, under threat from Roman nobles, turned to the Frankish king for protection, culminating in the famous crowning at St. Peter's Basilica. The conversation delves into the political motivations behind the coronation, the reactions of the Byzantine Empire, and the symbolic use of the Roman imperial eagle. They also examine the contested nature of the event—did Charlemagne truly desire the title, or was it a papal maneuver? The hosts tie this to the empire's later history, showing how Charlemagne's reign set precedents for the relationship between emperor and pope, and how his capital at Aachen became a center of power. The episode also touches on the Donation of Constantine, a forged document that later popes used to claim authority over the empire. Finally, Lucas and Luna reflect on how Charlemagne's legacy was invoked by later rulers like Otto I and Frederick Barbarossa, making this coronation a foundational myth for the Holy Roman Empire. #Charlemagne #HolyRomanEmpire #PopeLeoIII #Coronation800 #Aachen #ByzantineEmpire #DonationOfConstantine #RomanEagle #FrankishKingdom #ChristmasDay800 #StPetersBasilica #OttoI #FrederickBarbarossa #MedievalHistory #EmpireAndPapacy #FexingoHistory #History #Carolingian Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer6 min
episode The Hanseatic League: How Northern German Merchants Ruled the Baltic artwork

The Hanseatic League: How Northern German Merchants Ruled the Baltic

Long before the Holy Roman Empire's political machinery creaked into motion, a different kind of power was rising from its northern ports. The Hanseatic League wasn't an empire, a kingdom, or even a formal state—it was a loose confederation of merchant cities that dominated trade from London to Novgorod for over four centuries. In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore how the Hanse grew from a group of Gotland-bound traders into a naval and economic superpower that could make kings blink. They follow the salt herring that built Lübeck, the cog ships that carried amber and cloth across stormy seas, and the Hanse's brutal war with Denmark that ended with the Peace of Stralsund in 1370. They also uncover the League's darker side: its ruthless monopolies, its suppression of competitors like the city of Bruges, and its slow decline as nation-states and Atlantic routes eclipsed the Baltic world. Along the way, they touch on the Hanse's unique legal structure—the Kontore in Novgorod, Bergen, and London—and ask whether a merchant alliance ever truly needed to be holy or Roman to reshape history. #HanseaticLeague #Lübeck #BalticTrade #PeaceOfStralsund #Kontore #Novgorod #Bergen #LondonSteelyard #CogShips #SaltHerring #Hanse #MedievalTrade #HolyRomanEmpire #BalticSea #MerchantRepublics #EconomicHistory #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

Ayer8 min
episode The Imperial Post: How the Holy Roman Empire Delivered Mail artwork

The Imperial Post: How the Holy Roman Empire Delivered Mail

In this episode of Fexingo History, Lucas and Luna explore the surprisingly modern communication network of the Holy Roman Empire: the imperial postal system. Long before email or even national postal services, the Holy Roman Empire built a sophisticated relay network of horses and riders that could move a letter from Brussels to Vienna in under a week. Lucas tells the story of the Thurn und Taxis family, who ran the Imperial Post (Reichspost) for centuries, connecting the patchwork of princely states with remarkable efficiency. He explains how the postmasters used a system of distances and time (Poststunden) to calculate postage, and how the postal system even created Europe's first regular newspaper, the Ordinari Post-Zeitung. Luna asks about the economic and political impact of this system, and Lucas reveals how it helped bind the Empire together long before modern nationalism. The conversation also touches on the post riders' specialized equipment, the Posthorn signal, and how the system was so reliable that it became the model for postal systems across Europe. A fascinating look at an overlooked pillar of Holy Roman Empire governance. #ThurnUndTaxis #Reichspost #Poststunden #OrdinariPostZeitung #HolyRomanEmpire #Posthorn #History #FexingoHistory #MedievalCommunications #MaximilianI #Brussels #Vienna #PostalSystem #EarlyModernEurope #ImperialPost #Courier #TradeRoutes #CommunicationHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

14 de jul de 20265 min
episode The Imperial Mint: How the Holy Roman Empire Made Its Coins artwork

The Imperial Mint: How the Holy Roman Empire Made Its Coins

In this episode, Lucas and Luna explore the Holy Roman Empire's sprawling system of coin production, from the imperial mints of the Hohenstaufen era to the patchwork of local minting rights that defined the late medieval economy. They discuss the Reichsmünzmeister, the imperial mint master who oversaw the striking of the gold florin and silver groschen, and how the empire's fragmented authority produced hundreds of competing currencies. The conversation touches on the famous coinage of Charles IV's Prague groschen, the debasement crisis of the 15th century known as the Kipper und Wipper, and the role of mining towns like Kutná Hora and Freiberg in fueling the silver trade. They also examine the peculiar figure of the Münzwardein, the official responsible for testing coin purity, and how counterfeiting was punished as a form of high treason. Specific terms like Gulden, Groschen, and Heller are defined in context. The episode offers a concrete look at how money actually worked in the empire — and why it often didn't. #HolyRomanEmpire #Coinage #Mint #Reichsmünzmeister #Münzwardein #Gulden #Groschen #Heller #KipperUndWipper #CharlesIV #PragueGroschen #KutnáHora #Freiberg #SilverMining #Counterfeiting #MedievalEconomy #History #FexingoHistory Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

14 de jul de 20267 min
episode The Reichsmatrikel: How the Empire Taxed Itself artwork

The Reichsmatrikel: How the Empire Taxed Itself

Lucas and Luna dive into the Reichsmatrikel of 1521, the Holy Roman Empire's tax register that assigned each territory a fixed number of soldiers or cash for imperial campaigns. They explore how this system funded the Reichsarmee, the political horse-trading behind the numbers, and why tiny counties could be taxed into oblivion. The conversation touches on the Reichstag's role in approving the matrikel, the Römermonat as a unit of taxation, and the struggles of collecting from non-paying states like the Swiss Confederacy. Lucas explains how the matrikel was both a tool of imperial unity and a source of endless friction, with constant updates as territories shifted hands. The hosts highlight the 1521 register as the foundational document that survived until the empire's dissolution, despite perpetual complaints from overburdened territories. #Reichsmatrikel #Römermonat #Reichsarmee #Reichstag #ImperialTaxation #1521 #Worms #CharlesV #SwissConfederacy #Reichskreise #HeiligesRömischesReich #FexingoHistory #History #MedievalHistory #HolyRomanEmpire #TaxationHistory #GermanHistory #HolyRomanEmperor Keep every episode free: buymeacoffee.com/fexingo [https://buymeacoffee.com/fexingo]

13 de jul de 20266 min